Supreme Court: Health Care Mandate Is Constitutional as a Tax

NEWS NOTES

by
Sally P. Schreiber, J.D., and Alistair M. Nevius, J.D.

Published August 01, 2012

Court Decisions

As this issue went to press, the U.S. Supreme Court declared the mandate in Sec. 5000A, requiring U.S. citizens and legal residents to maintain minimum essential health coverage, to be a permissible exercise of Congress’s taxing powers under the Constitution (National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, Sup. Ct. Dkt. No. 11-393 (U.S. 6/28/12)).

The court, in a 5–4 decision, held that the payments required of individuals who do not maintain minimum health coverage under the “individual mandate” were not a penalty, but are a tax and are allowed under Congress’s power to tax in Article 1 of the Constitution. This means they are constitutional, even though a majority of the justices found that the individual mandate went beyond Congress’s powers under the Commerce Clause.

The entire act was upheld, although the Court did limit the federal government’s power to terminate states’ Medicaid funds. The Court held that the Medicaid portion of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, P.L. 111-148 (the Patient Protection Act), which requires states to accept an enormous expansion in the number of people they cover under the program or face a cut of all Medicaid funds, was unconstitutional as enacted, but found that a severability clause in the law allowed the Medicaid provision to go forward without the threat of the loss of all Medicaid funds.

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Shared Responsibility Payment Is a Tax

Although the individual mandate’s “shared responsibility payment” in Sec. 5000A is labeled a penalty, not a tax, the Court held it is a tax for purposes of determining its constitutionality and ultimately upheld it as a valid exercise of Congress’s power to tax.

Chief Justice John Roberts concluded that the individual mandate must be construed as imposing a tax on those who do not have health insurance, if such a construction is reasonable, because “every reasonable construction must be resorted to, in order to save a statute from unconstitutionality” (Hooper v. California, 155 U.S. 648 (1895)).

The Court held that the individual mandate was within Congress’s power under the Constitution’s Taxing Clause. The Court concluded that the individual mandate is not a legal command to buy insurance, but rather a tax on the choice to forgo buying insurance. It does not apply to people who are not required to file income tax returns. The fact that the Patient Protection Act calls it a penalty instead of a tax was not controlling, the Court said.

Provisions in the Health Care Law

Several health care–related elements of 2010’s health care reform legislation (the Patient Protection Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, P.L. 111-152 (the Reconciliation Act)) are already in effect, and the Court’s decision allows them to continue. These include a temporary high-risk pool for individuals with preexisting health conditions, a prohibition on lifetime dollar limits for essential benefits in insurance policies, and a requirement that dependents be allowed to stay on their parents’ health coverage until they turn 26. In addition, insurers are prohibited from excluding preexisting conditions for children under age 19 and, starting in 2014, will be prohibited from discriminating against any individual based on a preexisting medical condition. Also in 2014, states will be required to establish health insurance exchanges, and the insurance premiums of individuals in households with income up to 400% of the poverty line will be subsidized.

Other key health-related provisions that go hand in hand with the individual health insurance mandate are:

Community rating: A requirement that people in the same age group pay the same premium regardless of health status; and

Employer responsibility: A requirement that every company with a workforce of at least 50 full-time-equivalent employees offer affordable health insurance to its employees.

Tax Provisions

In addition to making sweeping changes to the U.S. health care system, the health care reform legislation added a number of new taxes and made various other revenue-increasing changes to the Code to help finance health care reform. It also made several health care–related changes to the Code to benefit certain taxpayers, including a credit to offset part of the costs of health insurance for low- to middle-income individuals and families and a credit to offset part of the costs to small businesses of providing health insurance for their employees.